Ondo Finance has recently taken a major step toward regulatory clarity in the tokenized asset space, submitting a formal no-action letter request to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The move seeks staff confirmation that the agency would not recommend enforcement action against the firm’s approach to enhancing its Ondo Global Markets (OGM) platform.
The proposal involves a carefully limited integration of Ethereum Mainnet to support the recording and administration of specific securities entitlements in tokenized form.
Importantly, this does not involve shifting the official legal ownership or recordkeeping of the underlying securities.
Those remain firmly within established U.S. custody, regulatory, and accounting frameworks.
Instead, the tokenized layer serves as a supplementary tool, held through the regulated custodian BitGo, to streamline operations for OGM’s existing tokenized notes.
These notes currently offer non-U.S. investors exposure to U.S.-listed stocks and exchange-traded funds without altering the fundamental structure of the products.
Ondo Finance emphasized that the request is deliberately narrow in scope. It does not seek a broad reinterpretation of securities laws or blanket approval for all forms of tokenization.
Rather, it asks the SEC to greenlight one specific, bounded model that layers blockchain technology onto traditional infrastructure.
By leveraging Ethereum Mainnet—where OGM already conducts much of its activity—the firm aims to reduce operational friction while preserving every core investor protection currently in place.
The rationale centers on practical improvements. According to Ondo, the on-chain enhancements would enable more precise collateral monitoring, faster and more efficient creation and redemption processes, and simpler reconciliation across the product suite.
“We think this structure can make OGM products more useful without changing the basic legal framework that supports them,” the firm noted in its explanatory blog post.
The filing underscores that public blockchain infrastructure, when paired with appropriate safeguards and established market participants, can complement—not replace—regulated financial systems.
This development arrives amid growing institutional interest in tokenized real-world assets.
Ondo Finance positions the request as a somewhat pragmatic step forward: an opportunity for the SEC to provide targeted guidance that allows innovation to proceed without awaiting lengthy rulemaking.
An SEC no-action letter, if granted, would not create new law but would offer the regulatory comfort needed for this precise implementation to move ahead.
For the broader crypto and traditional finance sectors, Ondo’s initiative highlights a maturing approach to tokenization—one that prioritizes continuity over disruption.
By keeping the official books unchanged while adding a more transparent, programmable layer on Ethereum, the model could potentially serve as a blueprint for other institutions seeking to digital streamline operations within existing regulatory frameworks.